| Years 1–3 (Pre-Treatment) | Saw orthopedist who administered 3 cortisone injections over time. Completed physical therapy focused on quad strengthening. Used knee sleeves and tried glucosamine supplements. Knee pain worsened progressively; was told to consider knee replacement surgery. |
| ▸ Treatment at City Integrative Rehabilitation | |
| Age / Sex | 55-year-old male |
| Occupation | Senior financial analyst, 10+ hours/day seated |
| Primary Complaint | Bilateral anterior knee pain worsening with prolonged sitting and stairs |
| Duration of Symptoms | 3+ years, progressively worsening |
| Previous Treatments | Cortisone injections (3x), physical therapy, knee sleeves, glucosamine supplements |
| Diagnosis | Patellofemoral pain syndrome secondary to hip weakness and postural dysfunction |
Background
This 55-year-old financial analyst had accepted knee pain as an inevitable consequence of aging. For over three years, both knees ached after sitting at his desk for more than an hour. Stairs had become something he avoided. He took the elevator at work, chose restaurants without steps, and had quietly stopped joining his wife on their evening walks because his knees would throb afterward.
Cortisone injections gave temporary relief, but each round seemed to work less. His orthopedist suggested he might eventually need bilateral knee replacements. He came to City Integrative Rehabilitation looking for a second opinion before committing to surgery.
Assessment Findings
His knees themselves were not the primary problem. Imaging showed mild cartilage wear consistent with his age, but nothing that explained his level of pain. What our assessment revealed was a cascade of compensations driven by years of sedentary posture. His hip flexors were severely shortened from decades of sitting, pulling his pelvis into an anterior tilt. His gluteal muscles had essentially shut down, forcing his quadriceps and IT bands to overwork with every step. The patellofemoral tracking dysfunction was a downstream consequence of hip and core instability, not a knee problem at all.
His breathing pattern was entirely chest-dominant. He had lost the ability to engage his diaphragm effectively, which meant his deep core stabilizers were not activating, leaving his lower body to compensate for a trunk that could not stabilize itself.
Treatment Protocol
Phase 1 Weeks 1-3 | Diaphragmatic breathing retraining using DNS developmental positions. Restoration of intra-abdominal pressure and deep core activation. Manual release of hip flexors and quadriceps. Chiropractic adjustment of lumbar spine and pelvis to restore neutral alignment. |
Phase 2 Weeks 3-5 | Progressive gluteal activation using AiM-informed movement sequences. DNS-based crawling patterns to integrate hip stability with core control. Ergonomic workstation assessment and complete redesign: sit-stand desk, monitor height adjustment, and scheduled movement breaks every 45 minutes. |
Phase 3 Weeks 5-8 | Functional loading progressions: squats, step-ups, and single-leg stance training. Walking program with gait retraining to ensure proper hip extension and glute engagement. Transition to independent home exercise program. |
Progress Timeline
| Week 3 | Began DNS crawling progressions. Noticed knee pain on stairs was noticeably less sharp. |
| Week 5 | Walking 20 minutes without knee pain for the first time in over two years. Ergonomic changes at work making a significant difference. |
| Week 8 | Bilateral knee pain resolved. Taking stairs without hesitation. Resumed evening walks with his wife. Orthopedist confirmed surgery was no longer being discussed. |
Outcome
In eight weeks, this patient went from considering bilateral knee replacement to walking pain-free and taking the stairs without a second thought. No injections. No surgery. The solution was not in his knees at all. It was in restoring the hip stability, core function, and postural alignment that years of desk work had eroded. His ergonomic workstation overhaul ensured that the corrections would hold through long work days, and his home exercise program gave him the tools to maintain his progress independently.
This case study represents a real patient treated at City Integrative Rehabilitation. Details have been modified to protect patient privacy. Individual results may vary.

